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Hi David,
Thanks for the info! I had a good read through your page and learned a few things~ The links that you mentioned seem to be down though. How do you find your minicup handles compared with other small dinghys, especially to windward? Im a bit on the large side myself at 6'3" and 230lbs, so im wondering if this boat is quite big enough for me. It looks to have plenty of flotation. when you built your boats, what ended up taking a lot more time than you expected, and what was the biggest blowout on the budget side of things? Im hoping to get a few friends together and all build the same type of boat so that we can race out on the lake near us, Ive already talked my uncle into it and may have acouple of guys from work. If things dont turn out right in the end though, I run the risk of being drowned in the same lake by this group of guys ;-) Thanks, Shaun I love my MiniCups and I built two of them, a trailer to haul them and a dolly to carry them to the water. I have built several iterations of sails for them. They sail very well. So, get the plans but do not strictly go by them because they are for 1970s era boatbuilding methods. Here is my site for MiniCup building: http://home.mindspring.com/~ohara5.0/ At the time I wrote it, I did not have much experience with epoxy and fiberglas so I couldnt properly glass them. I am now glassing them. The visqueen sails work ok but soon fall apart as the duct tape fails in water. I tried various things as I discuss in the site. Currently, I am using sewn polytarp sails that work very well. My next project for them will be reefable sails. I have used my MiniCups so much that they are nearly worn out which is why I am now rebuilding them with glass. Andrew Butchard also has good info on his MiniCup building. Good Luck and have fun David OHara |
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